| Literature DB >> 27160107 |
Mia Tova Minen1,2, John Torous3, Jenelle Raynowska4, Allison Piazza5, Corita Grudzen6, Scott Powers7, Richard Lipton8, Mary Ann Sevick9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing interest in using electronic behavioral interventions as well as mobile technologies such as smartphones for improving the care of chronic disabling diseases such as migraines. However, less is known about the current clinical evidence for the feasibility and effectiveness of such behavioral interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral medicine; Biofeedback; Cognitive behavioral therapy; Electronic; Headache; Migraine; Progressive muscle relaxation therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27160107 PMCID: PMC4864730 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-016-0608-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Fig. 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram
Description of studies meeting eligibility for the systematic review
| Tool | Type of behavioral intervention | Design | First author, year | # of participants (N), setting, duration of treatment | Headache type/criteria | Outcomes measured | Results (HA freq, HA intensity, disability, adherence) | Other results | Drop out rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD ROM | CBT | RCT (waitlist control) | Connelly, 2005 [ |
| Migraine, tension type or chronic daily HA min 4/month with symptom free period, assessed by neurologist or NP | HA duration; HA days; HA intensity; HA severity; Medication; Self-efficacy; QoL; Disability; Acceptability | • There was a significant reduction in HA frequency from baseline to post-tx in both the tx (Headstrong) + control groups (Univariate ANOVA, | • Significant “group by phase” interaction effect on the HA duration variable ( | 6 % Overall (4 % tx group vs 2 % control group) |
| • A clinically significant change in HI from baseline to 1 month post-tx was observed in 60 % of the tx group + only 8 % of the control, therefore using the adjunctive Headstrong program resulted in more children achieving clinically significant outcomes (Chi-square, | |||||||||
| • Significant “group by phase” interaction effect on the HA intensity variable ( | |||||||||
| HA intensity decreased from baseline to 1 month post-tx in the tx group, while it remained fairly constant in the control group. | |||||||||
| • No power to assess secondary outcomes including disability. | |||||||||
| CBT + self-management | RCT | Rapoff, 2014 [ |
| migraine with or without aura min 1/week | HA duration; HA frequency; HA days; HA severity; QoL; Disability | • NS change in HA frequency between tx + control groups | 50 % Overall-no allocated intervention (55 % tx group vs. 43.3 % control group) | ||
| • There was a statistically significant difference in pain severity (10-point VAS) post-intervention, with tx group reporting lower pain severity than control group (5.06 vs. 6.25, | |||||||||
| 18.6 % Overall were lost to follow-up (17.5 % tx group vs. 20 % control group) | |||||||||
| • At 3 months post-intervention, parents reported lower migraine-related disability (PedMIDAS) in the tx group compared to control group (1.36 vs. 5.18, | |||||||||
| Internet | CBT | Parallel group unblinded RCT | Day, 2014 [ |
| Migraine, Tension-type, cluster or other primary HA min 3 days/month | HA duration; HA index; HA frequency; HA intensity; HA severity; Medication; Self-efficacy; Disability; Acceptability; Alliance; Feasibility; Engagement; Other | • There was a statistically significant baseline to post-test decrease in HA frequency, HA peak intensity + HA average intensity in the total completer sample, however there were no significant differences in these variables between the tx + control groups. | • ITT analysis: Greater improvement in self-efficacy ( | 11.3 % Overall prior to randomization |
| 2.1 % Overall after randomization (.53 % in tx group vs. 1.6 % in control group) | |||||||||
| • Completer analysis: Improved pain interference ( | |||||||||
| • For the ITT analysis, there was a significant decrease in HA frequency overall, but again no difference in tx groups. | • MBCT was found to be feasible, tolerable + acceptable to patients. | ||||||||
| CBT | Prospective parallel group design | Bromberg, 2012 [ |
| migraine with or without aura min 2/month | Pain catastrophizing; Self-efficacy; Disability; LoC; CPC; DAS; Other | • Reduction of HA frequency + severity could not be tested due to technical problems resulting in loss of data. | • Decrease in depression (DASS) in tx group compared to controls from baseline to 3-months post-intervention ( | 11.3 % Overall prior to randomization | |
| 2.1 % Overall after randomization (.53 % in tx group vs. 1.6 % in control group) | |||||||||
| • Both tx + control subjects reported similar reductions in disability on MIDAS (12.8 % decrease + 13.0 % decrease respectively) immediately post-intervention. | |||||||||
| • Decrease in stress (DASS) in tx group compared to controls from baseline to post-intervention ( | |||||||||
| • Follow-up assessment completion in tx vs. control groups respectively were 80 % vs. 89 % at 1-month, 70 % vs. 82 % at 3-months, + 55 % vs. 82 % at 6-months. | • Reduction in pain catastrophizing (PCS) in tx group compared to controls from baseline to post intervention ( | ||||||||
| • CPCI-42:Increase in relaxation (baseline to post-intervention, 3-month assessment + 6 month assessment), task persistence (baseline to post-intervention + 3-month assessment), exercising (baseline to post-intervention) + use of social support (baseline to post-intervention) in tx group compared to controls. | |||||||||
| • Increases in self-efficacy in tx group compared to controls (baseline to post-intervention, 3-month assessment + 6 month assessment) | |||||||||
| CBT (family-based) | RCT | Law, 2015 [ |
| Recurrent HA (>3 months) | HA days; HA intensity; Activity limitation; DAS; Acceptability; Feasibility; Engagement; Other | • There was a statistically significant reduction in HA frequency from baseline to post-tx + baseline to 3-month follow up in both tx conditions, however there was NS difference in HA frequency between tx + control groups. | • There was a significant reduction in activity limitations, emotional functioning + parent response to pain behavior from baseline to post tx in both groups, but no significant difference between tx + control groups | 28.9 % Overall (29.5 % in tx group vs 28.2 % in control group | |
| • There was a statistically significant reduction in HA pain intensity from baseline to post-tx + baseline to 3-month follow up in both tx conditions, however NS in HA frequency between tx + control groups. | |||||||||
| CBT + PMR | RCT | Trautmann, 2010 [ |
| Migraine, tension-type HA, or combined HA min 2 HA attacks/month | HA duration; HA frequency; HA intensity; Pain catastrophizing; QoL; DAS; Acceptability; Alliance; Other | • There was a significant reduction in HA frequency + duration post-tx in all groups, but NS between groups. | • Pain catastrophizing was significantly reduced post-assessment in all groups, but no difference was found between groups. | 7.7 % Overall (16.6 % in CBT group vs. 0 % in AR group vs. 5.3 % in EDU group) | |
| • No significant difference in HA intensity was found in any group at post-assessment | • Responder rates (reduction in HA frequency of 50 % or more from baseline) were significantly higher in CBT (63 %) + AR (32 %) groups, compared to the EDU/ control group (19 %).This resulted in NNTs of 2.0 for CBT + 5.2 for AR. | ||||||||
| • There was no significant difference in depression, psychopathological symptoms, + health-related quality of life in any group post-assessment. | |||||||||
| CBT + Relaxation | RCT | Sorbi, 2015 [ |
| Migraine with 2–6 attacks in the month prior to randomization | HA index; HA intensity; Medication; Self-efficacy; QoL; Disability; LoC; Other | • NS in HA frequency or intensity in either group or between groups. | • HA duration decreased significantly more in telephone arm ( | 32 % Overall (29 % tx vs. 35 % control) | |
| • NS in HI between groups | |||||||||
| • Self-reported inventories (HADS depression subscale, HDI, PSS) showed significant improvements in both groups but not between groups. | |||||||||
| Multimodal including CBT | RCT | Trautmann, 2008 [ |
| Migraine +/or tension-type HA min 2 HA attacks/ month | HA duration; HA frequency; HA intensity; Pain catastrophizing; Acceptability; Alliance | • No significant difference found between HA frequency or intensity between groups post-tx. | • NS found between the two groups post tx in any of the outcome variables (HA frequency, intensity, duration, or pain catastrophizing). | 11.1 % Overall (5.6 % in tx vs. 5.6 % in control) | |
| • Frequency of HA decreased significantly from pre-tx to post-tx in CBT group but not in control (EDU) group. | • Pain catastophizing was significantly decreased from baseline to post tx in CBT group but not in control. | ||||||||
| • NS difference between the groups in satisfaction or “patient-therapist-alliance/assistance” | |||||||||
| Multimodal including CBT | RCT | Hedborg, 2012 [ |
| Migraine at least 2 times monthly | Medication | • Decrease in total migraine drug intake at the end of the MBT program in the MBT group (13.0 vs. 10.1 drug doses/subject/56 days) compared to controls, no significant difference in total migraine medication drug intake in the control group (8.3 vs. 8.9 drug doses/subject/56 days) | 8.4 % Overall (7.4 % in MBT+ hand massage vs. 14.3 % in MBT vs. 3.6 % in control group) | ||
| • Drug efficacy increased during MBT from 0.30 to 0.52 ( | |||||||||
| Multimodal including CBT | RCT | Hedborg, 2011 [ |
| Migraine at least 2 times monthly | HA frequency; QoL; DAS; Acceptability | • 40 % of patients receiving MBT alone + 42 % of patients receiving MBT+ hand massage had 50 % + reduction in migraine frequency when compared to control group. | 8.4 % Overall (7.4 % in MBT+ hand massage vs. 14.3 % in MBT vs. 3.6 % in control group) | ||
| • Hand massage NS on migraine frequency compared to MBT alone. | |||||||||
| • NS in depression (MADRS-S) scores from baseline to post-tx or across groups. | |||||||||
| • Improvement in “perceived work performance” in hand massage + MBT group from baseline to all follow-up points. | |||||||||
| Multimodal including CBT + applied relaxation | RCT | Andersson, 2003 [ |
| Migraine, Tension-type HA, or cluster HA (Dx = self-report) | HA duration; HA index; HA days; HA intensity; Disability; CPC; DAS | • NS in HA frequency or intensity (either group or between groups). | • HA duration decreased more in telephone arm ( | 32 % Overall (29 % tx vs. 35 % control) | |
| • NS in HI between groups | |||||||||
| • Self-reported inventories (HADS depression subscale, HDI, PSS) showed significant improvements in both groups but not between groups. | |||||||||
| Multimodal including PMR + biofeedback | RCT (delayed tx control which later crossed over) | Devineni, 2005 [ |
| Migraine with or without aura, tension-type HA, or mixed. | HA duration; HA index; HA frequency; HA severity; Medication index; Disability; DAS; Cost | • Only a non-significant trend was found for # of HA days per week between groups post-tx. | • There was a trend towards a between group difference in medication index post tx ( | 38.1 % Overall (58.8 % in immediate tx group vs. 70.4 % in delayed tx group) | |
| • % of tx completers with clinically significant improvement (50 % decrease in HI) was 38.5 % vs. 6.4 % (waitlist) | |||||||||
| • There was a significant decrease in peak intensity between the tx and control groups post-tx | |||||||||
| • Estimated time expenditure for the therapist =1.3 h/participant (range = 0.2–8.8 h), resulting in a cost-effectiveness estimate of 0.32. | |||||||||
| • Greater compliance was associated with greater improvement in primary HA outcomes. | |||||||||
| Multimodal including PMR | Randomized to intervention vs waitlist | Strom, 2000 [ |
| Recurrent HA (>6 months, at least 1 HA per week) | HA duration; HA index; HA days; HA intensity; HA severity; Medication index; Disability; DAS; Cost | • Decrease in HA days + HA peak intensity post-tx in the tx group compared to the control group. | • Improvement in HI (average reduction in HI was 31 % for tx group vs. 3 % for control group, | 56 % Overall | |
| • Cost-effectiveness: Estimated sum of therapist time = 40 hrs/participant. Cost-efficiency estimate: 0.78 | |||||||||
| • NS in Headache Disability Inventory (HDI) or Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). | |||||||||
| Multimodal including relaxation | RCT | Kleiboer, 2014 [ |
| Migraine with or without aura + 2–6 attacks/30 days prior to randomization | HA frequency; HA days; HA severity; Self-efficacy; QoL; Disability; LoC | • A 20–25 % decrease in migraine frequency was found for both the tx + control groups, NS between groups. | • BT (tx group) had significantly more improvement that the control group in migraine-related self-efficacy ( | 27.4 % Overall (39.0 % in tx group vs. 14.5 % in control group) | |
| • A significant but small decrease in average attack peak intensity was seen in the ITT BT (tx) group from baseline to post-tx, but NS between groups. | |||||||||
| • Compliance was explored in a random sample of 60 participants, which showed that participants reported conducting at least one relaxation exercise on 45.5 % of days of being in training. | |||||||||
| Other | Descriptive study | Sorbi, 2010 [ |
| Migraine with 1–6 attacks/month | Acceptability | • All lessons were rated positively regarding clarity, instructiveness, importance + easy execution by new participants | 40 % Overall (New Participants) + 0 % overall (Expert Patients) | ||
| • Expert patients provided positive ratings for the web application, digital support, + web-adaptation of the protocol. | |||||||||
| Self-Management Program | Descriptive study (Interviews + concept mapping to develop Web-prototype + study feasibility) | Donovan, 2013 [ |
| Migraine | Acceptability | • Disagreement over content areas for the website-clinicians but not adolescents felt diet + exercise were important to include. | N/A | ||
| • During the prototype evaluation, most adolescents indicated that the website would be useful (especially the “Ask an Expert” feature) when they felt a migraine coming on or had a migraine. | |||||||||
| • Caregivers reported being “somewhat” to ‘extremely likely” to use the range of features offered on the website. | |||||||||
| PDA | Multimodal including relaxation | Descriptive Study + Case Control study | Kleiboer, 2009 [ |
| Migraine | HA frequency; QoL; LoC; Acceptability | • There were no significant improvements in HA frequency in the ODA + BT group (tx) compared to BT alone (control). | • ODA was considered feasible, well-accepted + perceived to support self-care. | 29.5 % Overall |
| • There were no significant improvements in internal control or migraine-specific QoL in the ODA + BT group compared to BT alone. | |||||||||
| Other | Descriptive pilot study (To establish feasibility) | Sorbi, 2007 [ |
| Migraine without aura | Acceptability | • In the second run, adherence was 85 %. | • ODA had good acceptability evidenced by positive participant responses | 0 % Overall | |
| • Loss of data due to technical problems amounted to 6.8 % of potential diary entries + lost internet connection contributed to loss of 5.6 % of lost diary entries. | |||||||||
| Other | Multimodal including biofeedback | Prospective, single-arm, open-label pilot study | Shiri, 2013 [58] |
| Chronic migraine or Chronic Tension-type HA | QoL; Activity limitation; Other | • Patients reported a decline in HA severity (VAS 4.28 pre-test vs. 3.11 post-test, p 0.015) + signficant improvements in daily function + quality of life. | • Improvement pre-tx to post-tx in quality of life (Pedsi QL) + daily function (measured by 2 questions on VAS scale) | 10 % Overall |
| • Overall the participants reported they were satisfied with the tx. | |||||||||
| Multimodal including Biofeedback | RCT | Scharff, 2002 [59] |
| Migraine with or without aura +/-co-existing tension-type HA | HA index; HA days; HA severity; DAS; Acceptability | • Change in # of HAs recorded + highest intensity rating over time, but there were no significant between-group differences. Likely due to small n + low power of the study. | • 53.8 % (7) of children in the handwarming biofeedback group, 10 % (1) in the handcooling biofeedback group, and 0 %(0) in the waitlist control group had a 50 % or more decrease in HI at the post tx. The significantly higher proportion of participants achieving 50 % reduction in HI in handwarming group vs. handcooling group was maintained at 3 month + 6 month follow-up. | 9.4 % Overall (0 % in handwarming group vs. 9.1 % in handcooling group vs. 8.3 % in WLC group) | |
| • Adherence: Data from home practice records of 29 participants in handwarming or handcooling group indicated the average # of practice sessions was 5.3 times per week. | |||||||||
| • NS in CDI or STAIC scores. | |||||||||
| • There was a temperature change between the handwarming + handcooling groups, with the handwarming group more likely to report that their temperatures increased. | |||||||||
| Other-Sound therapy | RCT (double blind, placebo-controlled study with a parallel group add-on design) | Trinka, 2002 [60] |
| Migraine with or without aura assessed by neurologists | DAS; Acceptability; Other | • Raw values of the “headache” subtest of the GBB improved in both groups but NS between groups. | No Adherence Data | ||
| • NS in FPI-R, STAI or SDS | |||||||||
| PMR+ Biofeedback | Prospective non randomized | Arena, 2004 [61] |
| Migraine or combined migraine-tension HA | HA index; HA days; HA severity; Medication index | • 1 subj had 50 % or greater reduction in HI, 2 had some clinical improvement, 1 subject demonstrated no tx response | 0 % Overall | ||
| Biofeedback | Prospective non randomized | Folen, 2001 [62] |
| Migraine, Chronic daily HAs | Acceptability | • When evaluating the viability of the system in 2 separate rooms of the medical center, patient satisfaction was high (8/10) + patients produced physiologic changes in desired direction. | No adherence data | ||
| • Total cost of the system about $9000 |
* = 8 weeks (56 days) to 11.4 weeks (80 days) (=recommended duration of treatment. With 8 lessons, each lesson advised to be completed in 7–10 days) Actual average treatment duration = 3.6 months (suggesting it took ~2wks per lesson).** = First group of adolescents/ caregivers for interviews and concept mapping: 12 (ages 12–17, adolescents), 9 (ages 30–55, caregivers) 12 (adults, clinicians).*The same procedure was used to recruit a second group of adolescents and their caregivers and clinicians to evaluate the prototype website: ?12? (ages 12–17, adolescents), ?9? (34–55, “mothers”) and ?12? (clinicians, adults). *** = 44 (ages 25–63) for ODA group feasibility and utility study aim, 31 (ages 25–59) in ODA+ BT group, 31 (ages 26–58) in ODA- group (matched controls). **** = N = not specified (“a number of patients”) A description of 2 patients with headache who received biofeedback with the ProComp remote system was provided, however they indicate there are more patients who have received this treatment and state a study to objectively evaluate equivalency between telehealth and in-vivo treatment is underway. HI, Headache Index; Tx, Treatment; HA, Headache; HA days, Days with headache; CPC, Chronic pain coping; DAS, Depression anxiety stress; QoL, Quality of life; LoC, Locus of control
Outcomes table ([27, 38–57] 58–62)
Various descriptions of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) conducted in the studies
| Connelly, 2005[ | A CD-ROM program was provided to give additional strategies to help manage head pain. |
| Rapoff, 2014 [ | “…lessons on how to use various empirically supported cognitive-behavioral treatments to self-manage recurrent headaches…focused on problem-solving and stress management, and targeted pain behavior and parental response to pain.” |
| Day, 2014 [ | “8-week MBCT for depression Protocol” Protocol: Segal Z, Williams JM, Teasdale J. Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy for Depression: A New Approach to Preventing Relapse. New York: The Guilford Press; 2002. |
| Bromberg, 2012 [ | “Lessons—interactive instruction for learning practical pain self-management skills and strategies, and how to apply them to solve problems. Tools—visual and graphic interactive learning experiences that allow users to actively manipulate information to construct knowledge and learn to solve problems. Self-assessments—structured sets of questions that help users to reflect on and learn what skills and knowledge they have, where their relative strengths and deficits are, and how to identify what behaviors to target for change.” |
| Law, 2015 [ | “Psychological therapy included face-to-face cognitive behavioral therapy for pain management and/or biofeedback. In addition, participants received access to an Internet CBT program (Web-based Management of Adolescent Pain; Web-MAP). The design and treatment content of Web-MAP was identical to the original version of the program.” Original program: Palermo TM, Wilson AC, Peters M, Lewandowski A, Somhegyi H. Randomized controlled trial of an internet-delivered family cognitive-behavioral therapy intervention for children and adolescents with chronic pain. Pain. 2009;146:205-213. |
| Trautmann, 2010 [ | “Adapted from the manualized face-to-face group therapy program devised by Denecke and Kro¨ ner-Herwig for children with recurrent headache.” Manual in German: Denecke, H., & Kroner-Herwig, B. (2000). Kopfschmerztherapie mit Kindern und Jugendlichen. Ein Trainingsprogramm.Gottingen: Hogrefe. “The first module presented education on headaches, the second unit focused on stress management (perception of own stress symptoms, coping with stress). In the following modules the participants acquired various skills including “cognitive restructuring (identification of dysfunctional cognitions regarding headache and stress and identifying functional cognitions).” |
| Sorbi, 2015 [ | Focused on “graded tasks, specific goal setting and review of behavioral goals; behavior self-monitoring with teaching the use of prompts and cues, feedback on performance and barrier identification; behavioral modeling and social comparison, a focus on time- or stress-management, and relapse prevention. Adapted from several studies and later on turned into a module: Sorbi MJ and Swaen SJ. Protocollaire behandeling van patienten met migraine en spanningshoofdpijn:Ontspannings training en cognitieve training (Training according to protocol in migraine and tension-type headache: Relaxation training and cognitive training). In: Keijsers GPJ, van Minnen A and Hoogduin CAL(eds) Protocollaire behandelingen in de ambulante geeste-lijke gezondheidszorg (Treatment according to protocol in ambulatory mental health care). Houten: Bohn Stafleuvan Loghum, 2004, pp.219–260. |
| Trautmann, 2008 [ | 6 self-help sessions (focusing on education on headaches, stress management, relaxation, cognitive restructuring, self-assurance strategies, problem solving) based on a face-to-face training manual. Manual: Kroner-Herwig, B. and Denecke, H. (2002). Cognitive-behavioural therapy of paediatric headache. Are there any differences in efficacy between a therapist-administered group training and a self-help format? Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 53, 1107–1114. |
| Hedborg, 2012 [ | 53-page training program aimed at improving stress coping skills and divided into the following topics: stress physiology, physical activity, diet, thought patterns, handling of emotions, and attitudes. Training Program: Hedborg K and Muhr C. Multimodal behavioral treatment of migraine: an Internet-administered, randomized, controlled trial. Ups J Med Sci 2011; 116: 169–186. |
| Andersson, 2003 [ | “Cognitive-behavioral techniques for handling negative thoughts and core beliefs were included.” |